Bill Mollison Permaculture Lecture Series, On-LineNote: NetWorks Productions Inc. holds the copyrights to this on-line series. We ask that our copyrights be honored.
In addition, "Permaculture" is a copyrighted word. Only those who have completed a 72-hour design course are authorized to use the word in commerce.

These videos are documents from two design courses taught by Bill Mollison at the Fossil Rim Wildlife Center in Glen Rose Texas in 1994 and 1995. They are a definitive selection from our original 16 part series. These tapes bear many viewings and will benefit anyone who wants to learn how to help regenerate the earth - from back yard to bio-region. Teachers of permaculture have found these tapes to be a valuable coaching tool - edited to one hour.

You can watch them online by following the View Online links below or follow the Download link and then click the Download button on the resulting page to save a copy to your computer.

Efficiency of energy, resources, and time, and the creation of highly productive systems are the results of good Permaculture design. The methods are obvious once we have become co-creative with the forces of nature.Download video (159 MB)

Find out why it is so important to grow your own food and how to install the easiest, and highly productive, home food propagation systems; mulch garden, potato box, herb's spiral, and more. You don't need much space. These are basic Permacultural techniques.Download part 1Download part 2 (~151 MB total)

These are very specific trees which are used around the world for their ability to improve
soils. They are invaluable in range for livestock, as well as in fields under cultivation.Download video (163 MB)

What is cultura promiscua? To maintain functional bio-diversity is a basic tenet of Permaculture. Severely degraded land can be easily restored to highly productive land by using good observation techniques, plants and animals in succession, and common sense.Download video (153 MB)

... a continuation of #10. Two main techniques: the chisel-plow, and the wonders of worms and how to cultivate them. The patterns described in these two videos can be replicated in any type of Permaculture system, and scaled to any size.Download video (159 MB)

...a continuation of the Trees video. Potable water - where does it come from? How did it get there? What has become of it? What we can do to ensure that we will have safe water to drink, and to conserve as much of this precious material as possible.Download video (157 MB)

Once one has learned to harvest water, then the real fun begins with production of the myriad of foods and marketable commodities hosted by ponds and other water-rich environments.Download video (151 MB)

There are a multitude of ways to harvest, conserve, and utilize water. These strategies apply to coastal regions or islands with with zero precipitation, arid lands, as well as to areas with plentiful seasonal rainfall.Download video (163 MB)

As desert is rapidly claiming vast areas of our planet, millions are on the verge of starvation. Yet, crops which occur naturally in arid land can provide all necessary nutrition for people and animals. The strategies discussed arise from years of observation in the deserts of Australia and from the peoples of Kalahari.Download video (163 MB)

... continuation of Drylands 1. Never, never irrigate the desert. The devastation caused by irrigation of arid land is irreparable. But there are alternatives: methods to set up a drought proof system. This is serious Permaculture!Download video (163 MB)

A documentary on the permaculture work done in Ecuador by the Rainforest Information Center, Centro de Investigatión de los Bosques Tropicales.Download video (68 MB)

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Straw Bale ConstructionStraw bale construction is gaining worldwide recognition as a viable, high-performance, earth- and people-friendly building technique which utilizes a natural by-product of food production. The Straw Bale Solution is 30-minute video introduction to straw bale building. It offers viewers an excellent look at $1.50 a square foot straw-bale homes in Mexico and the custom high-end straw-bale mansions of Santa Fe... How and why they are built, why they make so much sense and cents, and how to get started are all covered."

The Straw Bale Solution (#C 01)Building with bales can produce ecological, empowering and affordable housing, and NetWorks' award-winning video provides an entertaining overview of how and why. Narrated by Athena and Bill Steen, co-authors of The Straw Bale House book, The Straw Bale Solution features interviews with architects, engineers, owner-builders and leading straw-bale advocates. See how-to-build, learn about weather and code implications, and experience the barn-raising, community-building aspects of straw-bale homes. Then follow the Steens south of the border as they work with Save The Children in Sonora, Mexico, empowering local townspeople to create comfortable homes from straw bales - an abundant agricultural "waste product" of the region. Educators and innovators, Bill and Athena Steen push the boundaries of vernacular architecture and reveal how the world-wide housing shortage could have a Straw Bale Solution. Made possible by the Katherine and Lee Chilcote Foundation and The Lifebridge Foundation. 30 minutes.

The Last StrawThe Last Straw, the quarterly journal of straw-bale
and natural building, began in 1992 with Judy Knox and Matts Myhrman
of Out On Bale (un)Ltd at the publishing helm. Five years later, with The Last Straw well-established and recognized as the resource for up-to-date and pertinent straw-bale construction information,
Judy and Matts felt the need to begin focusing on other important
projects which had to be put on hold when interest in straw-bale construction
skyrocketed. They began the search for a responsible, committed team
who would continue the tradition of high quality outreach and reporting
they had established, and in 1998 they chose NetWorks Productions
to be their production and publishing successors.

In 2003, TLS was transfered to, and is now published by the Green
Prairie Foundation for Sustainability in Lincoln, Nebraska.
For a current subscription visit www.thelaststraw.org